Thursday 3 July 2014

Le Jardin d'Entêoulet

I have got into the bad habit of saying that there is only one garden worth visiting in the Gers, not I should hasten to add our own, but La Coursiana at La Romieu. I must now add a second, Le Jardin d'Entêoulet at Lasseube-Propre just south of Auch. I feel guilty that it has taken me so long to visit this garden It is featured in the 'Jardins Secrets de Gascogne which was published in 2007, and having read about it in this book I had every intention of visiting it, but for some reason only got around to doing  so very recently. It probably was not at its best since many of the large number of roses, many of them climbing through trees, were over. It also possesses an avenue of quinces, the first I have ever come across, but sadly it was neither in flower or laden with quinces. It shares something in common with La Coursiana that it is essentially the work of a woman, in this case, Renée Boy Faget, perhaps even more so since at La Coursiana Veronique Delannoy was able to build on the work of the previous owner Gilbert Cours-Darne who back in the Seventies had started what is now a magnificent arboretum. She may also have a little bit more help, perhaps even some provided by her very large number of offspring.  But what both ladies have is an enormous amount of energy and flair.

The gardens are very different. La Coursiana has the advantage, already mentioned of a very fine collection of trees. Its soil I believe has some acidity, rare in the Gers, which widens the selection of plants. Moreover Veronique Delannoy has a wonderful flair for colour expressed in her often dramatic use of annuals along with large numbers of dahlias, hollyhocks and salvias.  So it has more of a 'Gosh' factor about it and for a plantsman , or indeed woman, it has a little bit more interest.  If you wished to be critical you could say that La Coursiana is a bit flashy, or even bling bling. Le Jardin d'Entêoulet on the other hand is almost 'normal', that is if Monsieur Hollande had not given the word 'normal' such a bad connotation.  Along with the many roses already mentioned it is full of euhorbias, nepetas, phlomis,stachys and a very large collection of different grasses, to mention the more obvious. None of these plants are rare or difficult but they look contented, with the result that the garden looks contented. It also fits in very beautifully with its landscape, a landscape very typical of the Gers with arable and woodland rolled into an attractive mix, and like La Coursiana it has a view of the adjoining village and its collection of medieval looking buildings. It contains different garden rooms including a 'Jardin Intime' and a Jardin Cote Sud' and also a mare and thus a water garden. In one visit it is not possible to do justice to it, and in stressing its normalcy in one sense I am being unfair because if you started looking I am sure that you will find a large number of unusual plants. But what remains in my mind after a first visit is an image of a perfect Gersois garden, something that we who live in the Gers can look up to as something to strive towards, though I doubt that we will ever get there.

Just two postscripts. One is that I have been meaning for ages to recommend Hypericum kalmianum Gemo. I cannot be doing with many of this large family, and for me Hypericum calycinum, otherwise known as the Rose of Sharon, is a pernicious weed, while I have gone off H. Hidcote, a large bush with very in your face single yellow flowers.  'Gemo' on the other hand makes a much smaller evergreen bush covered at this time of year with delicate yellow flowers that look almost double because of its very prominent stamens. It has no bad side effects, such as spreading all over your garden. Indeed it is almost the perfect shrub able to hold its own in any company.

My second P.S. is that I have probably found yet another important Gersois garden. Many years ago I was put off from visiting Les Jardins de La Poterie Hillen by someone who said that they did not like the pottery, but on a recent visit to my my favourite garden nursery, that of Bernard Lacrouts, I was told by the redoubtable Ann that I must visit it, so that is what I am going to do, and will report back.